State v. Barber

120 So. 33, 167 La. 635, 1929 La. LEXIS 1668
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 2, 1929
DocketNo. 29442.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 120 So. 33 (State v. Barber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Barber, 120 So. 33, 167 La. 635, 1929 La. LEXIS 1668 (La. 1929).

Opinion

O’NIELL, C. J.

The defendants have appealed from a conviction and sentence for the crime of burglary. The indictment, specifically, was that they had feloniously broken and entered the store and warehouse of the Louisiana Central Lumber Company, in the nighttime, with intent to steal. In another count in the indictment the defendants were charged with larceny of certain merchandise in the store at the time; but a nolle prosequi was entered on the charge of larceny before the trial. Both defendants wére convicted of the crime of entering in the *639 nighttime, without breaking, with intent to steal. There are nine bills of exception in the record.

The first bill relates to a ruling-of the judge, sustaining an objection to a question propounded to a witness for the state, on cross-examination. The witness was the superintendent of the commissary which the defendants were accused of breaking and entering, and, in the direct examination, he testified that the goods listed in the indictment were stolen from the commissary. The defendants were endeavoring to show that certain articles of merchandise which were found in their residences when searched, after the burglary, and which were identified as goods which had come from the commissary, could not have been stolen on the night of the burglary, because the goods were in the defendant’s residences before the date of the burglary, and they claimed that they had bought the goods. The witness had testified, in the direct examination, that he had submitted to the grand jury a list of the articles found in the residence of the defendant Barber; and, on cross-examination, the witness was asked to examine the indictment and to state whether it showed that the articles, which he had submitted a list of to the grand jury, including a certain cap, were stolen on the night of the burglary. The objection to the question was that the indictment itself showed whether the goods that were found in Barber’s residence were included in the list contained in the indictment. The objection was not well founded, because the indictment itself, without explanation, could not have shown whether the list of articles enumerated as having been stolen from the commissary included the articles that were, found in the possession of either of the defendants after the burglary. It is said in the statement per curiam, and is conceded, that the testimony showed that the goods that were found in the possession of the defendants after the burglary were not stolen from the commissary on the night of the burglary. There is another statement per curiam, however, which makes the bill of exceptions worthless; that is, that the witness was afterwards permitted to testify, and did testify, that the articles found in Barber’s residence after the burglary were not stolen from the commissary on the night of the burglary. Therefore no harm was done by the original ruling which, for the time, sustained the objection.

The second bill of exceptions was reserved to a refusal of the judge to have the answer of the witness (referred to in the first bill) taken down by the clerk to be made a part of the bill of exceptions, as provided by Act 113 of 1896, p. 162. As the first bill of exceptions was made worthless by subsequent events, the refusal of the judge to have the answer of the witness taken down and made a part of the bill is a matter of no importance.

The third bill was reserved to the overruling of an objection to a question propounded by the district attorney to the wife of the defendant Day, while she was on cross-examination, as a witness for her husband. She had testified that the goods found in her residence had been bought at different times previous to the burglary, and that none of them had been brought home after the burglary. ■ On cross-examination she was asked how much her husband’s salary was and what the household expenses amounted to; the purpose of the inquiry being to show that it was not likely that her husband would have bought such a supply of goods as was found in his house after the burglary. The only objection urged was that the inquiry had nothing to do with the testimony which the witness had given for the defense. Our opinion is that the inquiry into the financial ability of the defendant to buy such a supply of goods as was found in his house was relevant to the testimony of the witness that the de *641 fendant had bought the goods. It appears from the bill of exceptions that the only-question-that was objected to specifically was as to how much the defendant’s house rent was. The answer was not unfavorable, for the witness replied that she thought the rent was only $7 per month. The bill of exceptions is not well founded.

The fourth bill was reserved to the overruling of an objection to certain. testimony given by a state’s witness named Dunn. He was asked by the district attorney whether he had ever seen the defendant Day in the commissary of the Louisiana Central Lumber Company at night, after the store had been closed. The attorneys for the defendants objected to the question on the ground that its purpose was to prove that the defendant Day was, in the commissary one night, after it had been closed, on an occasion long before the date of the burglary; and that such evidence was not only irrelevant, but would be very prejudicial to the defendant Day, by casting a suspicion that he had committed, or attempted to commit, a crime other than that for. which he was on trial. The objection being overruled, the witness answered that, one night about a year and four months before the burglary, he went to the store to get a tire patch for his automobile, and, although the store was closed, he saw the defendant Day inside, crossing from the grocery side to the dry-goods side of the store. Day was then employed as night watchman for the Louisiana Central Lumber Company, and continued to hold the position until arrested on this charge of burglary. It was not a part of his duty to go inside of the store, and he, was not supposed to have a key to it. The evidence against the defendants was only circumstantial. As a general rule, evidence tending to prove that the defendant in a criminal prosecution committed a crime other than that for which he is being tried is irrelevant, and therefore inadmissible; ' and the rule should be enforced strictly, because of the prejudicial effect and injustice of introducing such, evidence' when it is irrelevant. Bnt, when such evidence is relevant to an issue in the case on trial, it is admissible, notwithstanding its injurious effect. The only question to be determined when such evidence is offered is whether it is relevant to an issue in the case on trial. In this instance the evidence was relevant, because it tended to prove that the defendant Day, who was the night watchman for the Louisiana Central Lumber Company, had a key or other means of entering the commissary after it was closed by those whose duty it was to close and lock the doors at the end of the day’s business. The store was in the front and the warehouse in the rear end of the building, and the evidence showed that the rear door of the warehouse was opened from the inside, ,and that the door between the warehouse and the store was also opened. , The inference was that the burglar or burglars had first entered through the front door of the store; for the evidence showed that that door was locked by the storekeeper at the end of the day’s business and that all other doors and the windows were fastened from the inside.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 So. 33, 167 La. 635, 1929 La. LEXIS 1668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-barber-la-1929.